A portion of a Nintendo Life review…
With dozens of characters to explore and upgrade through four game modes, it’s a game you can play for a very long time without feeling like it’s taking over your life. If you have an interest in game...
A portion of a Nintendo Life review…
With dozens of characters to explore and upgrade through four game modes, it’s a game you can play for a very long time without feeling like it’s taking over your life. If you have an interest in games with a strong historic flavour and a mix of action and [...]
#usrelease
Tecmo Koei's Wii-exclusive third entry in the Samurai Warriors series is coming to North America this fall, with Nintendo of America signing on to handle publishing and distribution duties. ...
#usrelease
Tecmo Koei's Wii-exclusive third entry in the Samurai Warriors series is coming to North America this fall, with Nintendo of America signing on to handle publishing and distribution duties. More »
Following the recent announcement that Dragon Quest IX will be published by Nintendo in North America, the company has revealed another publishing partnership for an exclusive game from a big Japanese publisher: Nintendo will co-publish Koei's Samurai War...
Following the recent announcement that Dragon Quest IX will be published by Nintendo in North America, the company has revealed another publishing partnership for an exclusive game from a big Japanese publisher: Nintendo will co-publish Koei's Samurai Warriors 3 in North America this fall.
It makes sense that Nintendo would take the stewardship role for this game, as it contains a mode featuring characters and locations from Nintendo's Nazo no Murasame-jou ("The Mysterious Murasame Castle"), a Famicom Disk System game designed by none other than Shigeru Miyamoto. In any case, this is one way for Nintendo to ensure ongoing releases of third-party core games on its systems: by plucking existing ones from Japan and publishing them in North America itself.
Koei has decided that assembling giant crowds of fictionalized historical armies isn't enough! The publisher is now turning its attention toward assembling giant crowds of real people with its Sengoku Bushou Matsuri (Warring States Commander Festival), to...
Koei has decided that assembling giant crowds of fictionalized historical armies isn't enough! The publisher is now turning its attention toward assembling giant crowds of real people with its Sengoku Bushou Matsuri (Warring States Commander Festival), to be held March 6-7 in Saitama, Japan. The event is intended to celebrate not only samurai culture, but (of course) Koei's own recent Wii release, Samurai Warriors 3.
The event is packed with Japanese celebrities, including singer and suspected vampire Gackt, and the entire Samurai Warriors 3 voice cast will attend. We believe all the attending celebrities will be participating in some kind of war drama. Which means that if you want to see TV stars pantomiming samurai warfare in outrageous, game-inspired costumes, this is probably where you want to go. Here's the really crazy part: Koei expects 80,000 to attend.
[Via GameGrep; thanks, Peter]
Direct link here
The official website for Samurai Warriors 3 has been updated with a bunch of goodies. The video above was added, but we already showed you guys that earlier in the week. Tonight we get a bunch of screens and art that you’ll want to ch...
Direct link here
The official website for Samurai Warriors 3 has been updated with a bunch of goodies. The video above was added, but we already showed you guys that earlier in the week. Tonight we get a bunch of screens and art that you’ll want to check out. Hit up the links [...]
The latest entry in the Creator’s Voice series has popped up on the official Japanese Wii site, and this time the focus is Samurai Warriors 3. As will all of these features, there are tons of blue underlined portions of text. If you click on them, you...
The latest entry in the Creator’s Voice series has popped up on the official Japanese Wii site, and this time the focus is Samurai Warriors 3. As will all of these features, there are tons of blue underlined portions of text. If you click on them, you’ll be treated to video footage from [...]
I played two games in Koei's prolific Warriors series at TGS: the Wii-exclusive Samurai Warriors 3, and the PS3/360 port of the PSP's Dynasty Warriors Strikeforce. The two games were as different from one another as two Warriors games could be, though, of...
I played two games in Koei's prolific Warriors series at TGS: the Wii-exclusive Samurai Warriors 3, and the PS3/360 port of the PSP's Dynasty Warriors Strikeforce. The two games were as different from one another as two Warriors games could be, though, of course, both games stuck to the Warriors foundation of controlling a historical war hero as he or she beats several thousand enemy soldiers on a crowded battlefield. Both seem like high-quality entries, each offering compelling reasons for lapsed combatants to return to the fight.